[1]In a soil of middling quality, the proper proportion of seed is five modii of wheat or winter-wheat to the jugerum, ten of spelt or of seed-wheat—that being the name which we have mentioned[2] as being given to one kind of wheat—six of barley, one-fifth more of beans than of wheat, twelve of vetches, three of chick-pease, chicheling vetches, and pease, ten of lupines, three of lentils—(these last, however, it is said, must be sown with dry manure)—six of fitches, six of fenugreek, four of kidney-beans, twenty of hay grass,[3] and four sextarii of millet and panic. Where the soil is rich, the proportion must be greater, where it is thin, less.[4]
There is another distinction, too, to be made; where the
soil is dense, cretaceous, or moist, there should be six modii of
wheat or winter-wheat to the jugerum, but where the land is
loose, dry, and prolific, four will be enough. A meagre soil,
too, if the crop is not very thinly sown, will produce a diminutive,
empty ear. Rich lands give a number of stalks to each
grain, and yield a thick crop from only a light sowing. The
result, then, is, that from four to six modii must be sown,
according to the nature of the soil; though there are some
who make it a rule that five modii is the proper proportion for
sowing, neither more nor less, whether it is a densely-planted
locality, a declivity, or a thin, meagre soil. To this subject
bears reference an oracular precept which never can be too
carefully observed[5]—"Don't rob the harvest."[6]
Attius, in his
Praxidicus,[7] has added that the proper time for sowing is,
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—serere, cum est
Luna in Ariete, Geminis, Leone, Libra, Aquario.